Saturday, February 15, 2014

I am delighted to bring Joelle Casteel and her work to your attention here at Romance Righter. Joelle and I "met" on Facebook and found a number of connectors. Through people's posts you learn a lot about them. I can tell that Joelle is caring, concerned, and a very involved author and reviewer of romance literature. Enjoy the interview, and please comment or leave a question down below (so appropriate for this blog, eh?).

1. What are the three most important things people should
know about you.

I write BDSM erotic
romance, I live BDSM (psst.. I didn't read about it online, see FSoG and decide
to jump on the bandwagon.) I write not only from the lifestyle submissive
perspective, but also LGBT and polyamorous perspectives (don't expect monogamy
or just heterosexual couplings in my stories.) I prefer intelligent erotica;
don't be surprised if you find a discourse on philosophy by characters in
between sex scenes.

2. Given total choice, where would you live and why?

In the suburbs of a
large city like Seattle. There'd be a real, wonderful, diverse urban place for
me to go while my country loving Master would still be comfortable, living in
somewhere not too urban for His comfort.

3. What’s the best part of you? What makes you, you?

Hm, too many changes
currently have me wondering if my usual "my ability to get through
anything" still fits, but I guess, a dedication to get through experiences
that others often have trouble imagining overcoming.

4. When did you start writing? What did you write?

I started writing as
soon as my first English teacher managed to teach me to write a sentence. I
started writing erotica after my first girlfriend introduced me to Anne Rice's
erotica published under a pseudonym.

5. Did you wrestle with the decisions around traditional
publishing and indie publishing? Why did you go the route you did?

With my serial, it's
not been a struggle on deciding- I know it's way too outside of the box and I'm
not willing to give up final control of it. However with other WIPs I have
going, I do wrestle with notions of self-publishing or indie publishing. With
writing BDSM erotic romance, the question of "traditional publishing"
as in using the "Big 6" really isn't there, but there are a number of
indie publishers that deal mostly or exclusively with erotica/erotic romance,
and I do ponder them.

6. What writing you’ve done are you most proud of and why?

The final scene in
"Vala's Story"- (book 9) when I completed the story and saw Vala
finally get her "happily ever after."

7. What are you most proud of about yourself?

my ability to put
myself into almost anyone's metaphorical shoes

8. You are very open about the sub-dom relationship you are
in. Many people are unsure what it even means. What led you to live that life?
Do you encounter prejudice?

That first erotic book
I read? It was Anne Rice's "The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty." While
not an accurate representation of consensual BDSM (it wasn't meant to be; Anne
was writing a fantasy re-imagining of the Sleepy Beauty story), I found the
BDSM activities themselves highly arousing. The social group I traveled in had
lots of others interested in BDSM, either as teens just exploring or some
adults who had actually made their way into the Detroit BDSM scene. I got to
experience various plays with BDSM until at 19-ish I met Tom, the dom who was
the original model for The Queen, the Master in "Vala's Story."
Interestingly, this is a story I've told time and again on my blog, sometimes
focusing on one aspect or another.

Prejudice? Oh yes,
that's something I sadly know too well. When asked of my sexual orientation, I
reply that I'm poly, queer, and kinky. I don't really fit too well any one
place. I've been judged for not being just gay or straight. I've been judged
because I refuse to live monogamy. One stream of prejudice I've experienced
around BDSM is in relationship to my religion. Now I can imagine people thinking
"why would you want to talk about your sex life at church?" My answer
is two part- 1) just as homosexual people are more than their sex lives, so am
I. I constantly struggle with what to call my Master when in groupings where
I'm not sure it would be okay if I call Him by His title. and 2) I'm a
Unitarian Universalist. While we aren't as open-minded as many non-UUs seem to
think, we do tend to be more open-minded than the average faith community.
However there are "affinity groups" for both polyamorous and kinky
UUs, because many of us have experienced prejudice in our churches, sometimes
for as little as mentioning that we are aware of BDSM. Beyond "what do I
call my Master?" I have struggled with getting appropriate pastoral care
from UU ministers who didn't understand, inappropriately focused on my BDSM
identity, instead of the problem I was concerned about.

9. What is the most important thing you want others to understand
about your lifestyle choice.

Well biggest thing is
it's not necessarily a lifestyle choice. By that I mean, asking me not to
engage in a BDSM relationship is analogous to asking a homosexual person to
stop being gay. I cannot change what I feel is a very basic part of my
identity. This isn't the truth for all people engaging in BDSM, this
identity-based reality of engaging in BDSM, but it is for enough of us that
assumptions on why a particular person engages in BDSM are likely to be wrong.
... and no, many of us in the BDSM community don't find "Fifty Shades of
Grey" to be a legitimate, authentic representation of BDSM.

Do you like your erotica in as many flavors as I do? 14
separate pieces of erotica, both from "Vala's Story" and not, coming
from a variety of points of views, pairings of gender. Some full of love and
some just rutting sex. Some are related to my "Vala's Story" series
while others are just a collection of characters from my mind. This novel is
meant for open-minded adults.

And please watch my blog for updates on the releases and
blog tours for "Out of the Night: Book One" and "Gates of the
Garden: Book Two"- both excerpted IN JCCS!

Joelle Casteel has been writing for as long as she can
remember. Explicit, graphic, her writing isn't for minors or the easily
offended. Once upon a time, she preferred to write on a PC, sitting on a stool-
there were those who told her she looked like Tori Amos playing the piano.
She's still trying to get the hang of writing in an arm chair instead, normally
with a heavy dog's head resting on her feet, whether she wants that or not.
With BDSM gaining a broader audience with various books- which she will not
name because she can't stand them- she feels it's past time to put out her
impression of what BDSM can look like in reality.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

I posted an article on another blog explaining
to authors what I was doing to help build readership and reader loyalty to my
brand, Murders with Taste. (Clever, eh, for a culinary mystery series?) The
same advice and info applies to my erotic romance series, “Sex Sells”.

Authors need to consider creating book
club kits for their readers who might select their book for a club option. I
believe a marketing plan needs to include a full tool belt of various outreach
efforts. The article for that piece is:

I
posted here the entire kit in case someone wants to download pieces of it. I
tried to think what I would like in a book club kit. I want to know something
about the book, the author, and what others think of the book. So that’s there.

Additionally, if I were in charge of the
book club meeting, I would appreciate some discussion suggestions and ideas
about how to handle potential issues that arise. So, I put in my two cents
worth.

Apart
from that I decided to give “value-added” by including additional pieces I had
not seen in book club kits I checked out.

I
want to connect with my readers. I think that is the prime motivator of any
author. We want our words to touch others, and we want to hear about the
impact. To that end, I included ways to contact me via social media outlets
like Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. Also, I gave opportunities to connect through
Skype.

Another
piece that is often found at the back of historical fiction novels is what the author
investigated while writing the book. I included what I learned about prostitution
as well as information about sex addiction (hypersexuality). Fascinating stuff!
And that’s just some of the research. Authors research locales and news events
of note for their period.

It
occurred to me readers who find Streetwalker
interesting might like to know of other authors of the genre, so I put a few
names in.

But
the real value added is Carrie’s Top Ten Sex Tips. I included these on the back
of my business card, too, to keep folks from tossing it!

Take
a scroll through the Streetwalker Book
Club Kit included in the list of pages for this blog. Let me know what you
think.